“Emily, why does a race car driver press the metal in excess of 200 mph to win a race?” I asked. We were talking about habits and how habits create outcomes. “Why does a singer perform on stage? Why does an ice skater reach their peak in international competition? Why does a manager manage?”
Emily knew there was a very specific answer to this question, so she waited.
“They all do those things because they can. They have spent great periods of their life creating the habits to support the skills that drive them to the top. They reach high levels of competence because they practiced, tried and failed, gotten better and practiced some more, with a discipline to master those skills. They perform at a high level because they can. The great numbers who have not mastered those skills, who are not competent, were eliminated in the first round.
“Those who achieve mastery are a select few. And that includes effective managers.
“It is a discipline of habits to achieve competency. For a manager, these habits support the leadership skills necessary to be effective. And that is where we will start.” -TF
The August 2006 Scientific American has an article “The Expert Mind” by Philip E. Ross. “The preponderance of psychological evidence indicates that experts are made, not born.” (p.71)